The Superpower Conundrum
The Rise and Fall of Just About Everything
By Tom Engelhardt
The rise and fall of great powers and their imperial domains has been
a central fact of history for centuries. It’s been a sensible,
repeatedly validated framework for thinking about the fate of the
planet. So it’s hardly surprising, when faced with a country once
regularly labeled the “sole superpower,” “the last superpower,” or even
the global “hyperpower”
and now, curiously, called nothing whatsoever, that the “decline”
question should come up. Is the U.S. or isn’t it? Might it or might it
not now be on the downhill side of imperial greatness?
Take a slow train -- that is, any train -- anywhere in America, as I
did recently in the northeast, and then take a high-speed train anywhere
else on Earth, as I also did recently, and it’s not hard to imagine the
U.S. in decline. The greatest power in history, the “unipolar power,” can’t build a single mile of high-speed rail? Really? And its Congress is now mired in an argument about whether funds can even be raised to keep America’s highways more or less pothole-free.
Sometimes, I imagine myself talking to my long-dead parents because I
know how such things would have astonished two people who lived through
the Great Depression, World War II, and a can-do post-war era in which
the staggering wealth and power of this country were indisputable. What
if I could tell them how the crucial infrastructure of such a
still-wealthy nation -- bridges, pipelines, roads, and the like -- is
now grossly underfunded, in an increasing state of disrepair, and beginning to crumble? That would definitely shock them.
And what would they think upon learning that, with the Soviet Union a
quarter-century in the trash bin of history, the U.S., alone in
triumph, has been incapable of applying its overwhelming military and
economic power effectively? I’m sure they would be dumbstruck to
discover that, since the moment the Soviet Union imploded, the U.S. has
been at war continuously with another country (three conflicts and
endless strife); that I was talking about, of all places, Iraq; and that
the mission there was never faintly accomplished. How improbable is
that? And what would they think if I mentioned that the other great
conflicts of the post-Cold-War era were with Afghanistan (two wars with a
decade off in-between) and the relatively small groups of non-state
actors we now call terrorists? And how would they react on discovering
that the results were: failure in Iraq, failure in Afghanistan, and the
proliferation of terror groups across much of the Greater Middle East
(including the establishment of an actual terror caliphate) and
increasing parts of Africa?
They would, I think, conclude that the U.S. was over the hill and set
on the sort of decline that, sooner or later, has been the fate of
every great power. And what if I told them that, in this new century,
not a single action of the military that U.S. presidents now call “the finest fighting force the world has ever known” has, in the end, been anything but a dismal failure?
Or that presidents, presidential candidates, and politicians in
Washington are required to insist on something no one would have had to
say in their day: that the United States is both an “exceptional” and an “indispensible” nation? Or that they would also have to endlessly thank our
troops (as would the citizenry) for... well... never success, but just
being there and getting maimed, physically or mentally, or dying while
we went about our lives? Or that those soldiers must always be referred
to as “heroes.”
In their day, when the obligation to serve in a citizens' army was a
given, none of this would have made much sense, while the endless
defensive insistence on American greatness would have stood out like a
sore thumb. Today, its repetitive presence marks the moment of doubt.
Are we really so “exceptional”? Is this country truly “indispensible” to
the rest of the planet and if so, in what way exactly? Are those troops
genuinely our heroes and if so, just what was it they did that we’re so
darn proud of?
Return my amazed parents to their graves, put all of this together,
and you have the beginnings of a description of a uniquely great power
in decline. It’s a classic vision, but one with a problem.
Click here to read more of this dispatch.http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/176018/tomgram%3A_engelhardt%2C_what_happened_to_war/#more
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